We study the importance of sunk costs in determining entry conditions and inferences about firm conduct in an adapted Bresnahan and Reiss (1991, 1994) framework. In our framework, entrants incur sunk costs to enter, while incumbents disregard these costs in deciding on continuation or exit. We apply this framework to study entry and competition in the local U.S. broadband markets from 1999 to 2003. Ignoring sunk costs generates unreasonable variation in firms ’ competitive conduct over time. This variation disappears when entry costs are allowed. Once the market has one to three incumbent firms, the fourth entrant has little effect on competitive conduct
We develop a model of logit demand that extends to a multi-firm industry the traditional duopoly fra...
Telecommunications is an industry characterised by heavy investments in infrastructure. Historically...
The purpose of this article is to investigate the prospects for entry into an existing network in th...
We study the importance of sunk costs in determining entry conditions and inferences about firm cond...
We study the importance of sunk costs in determining entry conditions and inferences about firm cond...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
Past empirical literature provides strong evidence that competition increases when new firms enter a...
We use the evolution of the zip code level market structure of facilities-based broadband providers ...
This paper models competition between two firms, which provide broadband In-ternet access in regiona...
We study competition in experimental markets in which two incumbents face entry by three other firms...
In many markets consumers have transaction or learning "switching costs" between functionally undiff...
I study the effect of sunk entry-costs on potential competition in a multi-market framework, where p...
This paper presents a model of competition between an incumbent and an entrant firm in telecommunic...
We develop a model of logit demand that extends to a multi-firm industry the traditional duopoly fra...
Telecommunications is an industry characterised by heavy investments in infrastructure. Historically...
The purpose of this article is to investigate the prospects for entry into an existing network in th...
We study the importance of sunk costs in determining entry conditions and inferences about firm cond...
We study the importance of sunk costs in determining entry conditions and inferences about firm cond...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
Past empirical literature provides strong evidence that competition increases when new firms enter a...
We use the evolution of the zip code level market structure of facilities-based broadband providers ...
This paper models competition between two firms, which provide broadband In-ternet access in regiona...
We study competition in experimental markets in which two incumbents face entry by three other firms...
In many markets consumers have transaction or learning "switching costs" between functionally undiff...
I study the effect of sunk entry-costs on potential competition in a multi-market framework, where p...
This paper presents a model of competition between an incumbent and an entrant firm in telecommunic...
We develop a model of logit demand that extends to a multi-firm industry the traditional duopoly fra...
Telecommunications is an industry characterised by heavy investments in infrastructure. Historically...
The purpose of this article is to investigate the prospects for entry into an existing network in th...